Conventional versus Ritual Slaughter–Ethical Aspects and Meat Quality
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Comparison of the Types of Slaughter
2.1. Conventional versus Ritual Slaughter
2.2. Kosher and Halal Slaughter
3. Characteristics of Ritual Slaughter
3.1. Kosher
3.2. Halal
- Slaughter: cuts the animal’s trachea, esophagus and jugular veins. This method is mainly used for sheep, cattle and birds.
- Undercut: Performed by stabbing the animal with a knife at the bottom of the neck and making a cut through the front of the chest. This method is mainly used for camels.
- Stabbing: Performed by fatally injuring an animal that cannot be tamed, such as a wild animal that is allowed to be hunted, or a domestic animal that is difficult to control [95].
- the stunning equipment must be supervised by a qualified Muslim and periodically inspected by the appropriate Islamic authorities or halal certification body,
- stunning must be reversible, i.e., it must neither kill nor cause permanent damage to the animal,
- equipment used for stunning pigs must never be used for halal animals.
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Ethical Statement
References
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Specification | Animal Species | Type of Slaughter | Reference | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Conventional Slaughter | Halal Slaughter | Kosher Slaughter | |||
Plasma Cortisol [nmol/L] Exsanguination | Cattle | 43.72 | 88.81 | [48] | |
Plasma Cortisol [nmol/L] Exsanguination | Cattle | 45.08 | 68.70 | [49] | |
Plasma dopamine [ng/L] Exsanguination | 513.87 | 868.43 | |||
Plasma norepinephrine [ng/L] Exsanguination | 3425.57 | 3776.20 | |||
Plasma epinephrine [ng/L] Exsanguination | 3279.97 | 4352.20 | |||
Plasma concentrations of adrenaline affected by: - head-only electrical stunning using water bath, - slaughtering of stunned chickens, - slaughtering of no stun chickens | Broiler chickens | 651 455 511 | [50] | ||
Plasma concentrations of noradrenaline affected by: - head-only electrical stunning using water bath, - slaughtering of stunned chickens, - slaughtering of no stun chickens | 1671 1511 1504 | ||||
Plasma concentrations of corticosterone affected by: - head-only electrical stunning using water bath, - slaughtering of stunned chickens, - slaughtering of no stun chickens | 19.12 15.46 14.14 | ||||
Blood loss [%] | Goats | 4.725 (Pre-slaughter anesthesia with halothane followed by exsanguination) | 4.991 | [22] | |
Hemoglobin, Myoglobin, Total heme of longissimus lumborum muscle [mg/100 g] | 0.897 334.371 336.267 (Pre-slaughter anesthesia with halothane followed by exsanguination) | 0.851 337.196 339.049 | |||
Lipid oxidation (mg MDA/kg meat) during postmortem aging periods (day): 0, 1, 7 | 0.458 0.561 1.149 (Pre-slaughter anesthesia with halothane followed by exsanguination) | 0.498 0.538 1.139 | |||
pH of the meat (45 min) | Sheeps | 6.7 | 6.6 (Muslim slaughter method) | [46] | |
pH of the meat (24 h) | 6.2 | 5.7 (Muslim slaughter method) | |||
Blood loss [%] | 4.22 | 3.98 (Muslim slaughter method) | |||
Colour of the meat [pts] | 3.1 | 2.8 | |||
pH of the meat (45 min) | Cattle | 7.06 | 7.01 | [47] | |
pH of the meat (24 h) | 6.20 | 6.17 | |||
Colour of the meat [pts] | 4.80 | 4.91 | |||
Blood loss [kg] | 10.89 | 10.85 | |||
Blood loss as a % of live weight | 3.10 | 2.99 | |||
The content of minerals of longissimus thoracis muscle [mg/100 g] K P Na | Cattle | 346.69 200.47 40.27 | 284.62, 182.19, 606.78 | [51] | |
pH of the meat (2 h) | Cattle | 5.55 | 5.62 (Islamic ritual method of slaughter) | [52] | |
pH of the meat (2 days) | 5.61 | 5.67 (Islamic ritual method of slaughter) | |||
Drip loss (%) of the meat after: 24 h 2 days 6 days | 2.01 2.83 7.54 | 1.12 1.82 4.81 (Islamic ritual method of slaughter) | |||
Colour of the meat (after 2 h) L * a * b * | 46.19 23.85 12.43 | 44.53 23.85 11.7 (Islamic ritual method of slaughter) | |||
Colour of the meat (after 2 days) L * a * b * | 45.74 23.87 12.42 | 44.96 24.64 12.58 (Islamic ritual method of slaughter) | |||
Colour of the meat non-koshered/koshered L * a * b * | Cattle | 37.38/32.92 16.94/12.88 8.46/5.19 | [53] | ||
pH of the non-koshered/koshered meat | 5.79/5.90 | ||||
Salt content (%) of the non-koshered/koshered meat | 0.28/1.47 | ||||
log (Total count CFU/g) of the non-koshered/ko-shered meat | 4.6/3.9 | ||||
pH of the control sample of the meat (nontreated)/koshered meat: Day 0 Day 14 | Cattle | 5.64/5.53 5.55/5.49 | [54] | ||
Colour of the control sample of the muscle (nontreated)/koshered External surface Day 0 L * a * b * | 36.7/35.3 16.9/15.8 7.9/6.0 | ||||
Colour of the control sample of the muscle (nontreated)/koshered External surface Day 14 L * a * b * | 39.3/33.9 17.4/13.8 6.l/7.3 |
Forbidden Technique | Description |
---|---|
Pausing | Hesitation during the incision |
Pressing | Pressing or hacking instead of sliding, occurrence of forward and backward movements |
Digging | The knife is not visible throughout the shechita |
Tearing | Rupture of the trachea or esophagus; can happen if there is an incision in the knife |
Piercing | Cutting below upper lobe of the lung or above the large ring in the trachea (when injected with air) |
Type of Animal | Current [Ampere] | Duration [Seconds] |
---|---|---|
Chicken | 0.25–0.50 | 3.00–5.00 |
Lamb | 0.50–0.90 | 2.00–3.00 |
Goat | 0.70–1.00 | 2.00–3.00 |
Sheep | 0.70–1.20 | 2.00–3.00 |
Calf | 0.50–1.50 | 3.00 |
Steer | 1.50–2.50 | 2.00–3.00 |
Cow | 2.00–3.00 | 2.50–3.50 |
Bull | 2.50–3.50 | 3.00–4.00 |
Buffalo | 2.50–3.50 | 3.00–4.00 |
Ostrich | 0.75 | 10.00 |
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Żurek, J.; Rudy, M.; Kachel, M.; Rudy, S. Conventional versus Ritual Slaughter–Ethical Aspects and Meat Quality. Processes 2021, 9, 1381. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr9081381
Żurek J, Rudy M, Kachel M, Rudy S. Conventional versus Ritual Slaughter–Ethical Aspects and Meat Quality. Processes. 2021; 9(8):1381. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr9081381
Chicago/Turabian StyleŻurek, Jagoda, Mariusz Rudy, Magdalena Kachel, and Stanisław Rudy. 2021. "Conventional versus Ritual Slaughter–Ethical Aspects and Meat Quality" Processes 9, no. 8: 1381. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr9081381
APA StyleŻurek, J., Rudy, M., Kachel, M., & Rudy, S. (2021). Conventional versus Ritual Slaughter–Ethical Aspects and Meat Quality. Processes, 9(8), 1381. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr9081381